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Literary Forms Allegory – a story or visual image with a second distinct meaning partially hidden behind its literal or visible meaning. An allegory may be conceived at a metaphor that is extended into a structured system. Anecdote – a brief narrative of an entertaining and presumably true incident. Argument – discourse intended to convince or persuade through appeals to reason or emotion. Autobiography – an account of all or a part of a person’s life written by that person. Bildungsroman – translated literally means “development novel”. A coming of age work that follows its protagonist from youth to experience, or maturity. Biography – a written account of someone’s life, written by someone else, which focuses on the character and career of the subject. Comedy – a literary work written chiefly to amuse its audience. It usually provides a happy ending and emphasizes human limitations rather than human greatness. High Comedy – characterized by grace, elegance and wit; intellectual comedy Low Comedy – crude, boisterous comedy; slapstick and crude jokes; physical comedy Confessional Literature – autobiographical writing in which the author discusses highly personal and private experiences normally withheld. Convention – an accepted or expected style or form. (Wicked stepmothers in fairy tales, happy endings, etc.) Courtly Love – the emotion that a knight was expected to feel toward a noble lady. A convention of literature of the Middle Ages. Didactic – Any text whose main purpose is to teach or instruct. Dirge – a funeral song of lamentation; a short lyric of mourning. Discourse – spoken or written language. Argument – discourse intended to convince or persuade through appeals to reason or emotion. Description – the picturing in words of people, places and activities through detailed observations of color, sound, smell, touch and motion. Exposition – the setting forth of a systematic explanation of or argument about any subject. Narration – the process of relation a sequence of events or another term for narrative. Rhetoric – the art of persuasion, in speaking or writing Essay – a short written composition in prose that discusses a subject or proposes an argument without Claiming to be a complete or thorough exposition. Essays can be formal, informal or humorous. Epistolary – a novel written in the form of correspondence between characters. Eulogy – A formal composition or speech in high praise of someone (usually dead, but dead or alive) or something. Exemplum – brief tale told to illustrate a biblical text or to teach a lesson or moral. Expose – article exposing scandal or crime. Fable – a brief tale that conveys a moral lesson, usually by giving human speech and manners to animals and inanimate things. Farce – A type of drama related to comedy but emphasizing improbable situations, violent conflicts, physical action, and coarse wit over characterization or articulated plot. Genre – a French term for a type, species, or class of composition such as novel, poem, short story, and such sub-categories as sonnet, science fiction or mystery. Gothic – a type of novel characterized by mystery, horror, and the supernatural, often with haunted castles, secret passageways, grisly visions, and all of the paraphernalia of the tale of terror. Historical Novel – attempts to re-create an historically significant personage or series of events. Homily – religious sermon or discourse Melodrama – drama that pits unbelievably good characters against a despicably evil character. The plot includes dire events and near disasters. Good is always rewarded, and evil punished. Memoir – an account of a single period in a writer’s life, often one that coincides with important historical events. Metaphysical poetry – intricate 17th century English poetry employing wit and unexpected images. Miracle Play – medieval religious drama based on a miraculous event in a saint’s life or a story from the Bible. Mock Epic – comically or satirically imitates the form and style of the epic, treating a trivial subject in a lofty manner. Morality Play – allegory in dramatic form. Hero, who represents all mankind, is surrounded by personifications of virtues, vices, angels, demons and death, who battle for possession of the hero’s soul. Myth – an anonymous narrative, originating in the primitive folklore of a race or nation, that explains natural phenomena, or recounts the deeds of heroes, passed on through oral tradition. Novel – a lengthy fictional narrative in prose dealing with characters, incidents, and settings that imitate those found in real life. Novelette – built on one incident; shorter than a novel, but has more development of character and theme than a short story. Novella – a short novel. Novel of manners – a novel, usually comical and satirical, whose characters and plot emerge from and are limited by the social customs, values, habits and mores of a particular social class in a particular time and place. Paean – a song of triumph or thanksgiving. Parable – a brief tale intended to be understood as an allegory illustrating some lesson or moral. Parody – A composition that ridicules another composition by imitating and exaggerating aspects of its content. Pedantic – writing that borders on lecturing. Scholarly, academic, and often overly difficult and distant. Picaresque novel – a novel whose principal character is a low-born rogue who lives by his/her wits and who becomes involved in one predicament after another. Play – a literary work written in dialogue and intended for performance before an audience by actors on stage. Poetry – literature in its most intense, most imaginative, and most rhythmic form. Prose – in the broadest sense, all forms of ordinary writing and speech lacking the sustained and regular rhythmic patterns found in poetry. It resembles closely everyday speech. Psychological Novel – novel that focuses on the “interior” lives of its characters, their mental states and emotions, and their psychological motivations of their actions than on the actions themselves. Romance – any extended work of fiction that deals with adventure, extravagant characters, strange or exotic places, mysterious or supernatural incidents, heroic or marvelous achievements, or passionate love. Science Fiction – novels and short stories set either in the future or on some imaginary world. Short Story – a fictional narrative in prose, short in length (500-15,000 words approx.), usually limited to a few characters, a single setting, and a single incident. Sociological Novel – concerned primarily with social issues and problems. Tract – a formal, religious essay or pamphlet.